Millions of internal files from a recent rockstar games breach have surfaced online, but fans hoping for new GTA VI details will likely come away disappointed.
Summary
ShinyHunters dump 78.6 million Rockstar records
The hacking group ShinyHunters has published more than 78.6 million records allegedly stolen from Rockstar Games, releasing the trove one day before the deadline they had set for the company to respond. However, the data appears focused on business intelligence rather than game development secrets.
According to early analyses, the leaked files do not contain major revelations about the highly anticipated GTA VI, which is expected to be one of the biggest game launches of the decade. Instead, they mainly cover internal business and financial information, alongside operational analytics.
In an initial response, the company said: “We can confirm that a limited amount of non-material company information was accessed in connection with a third-party data breach.” Moreover, Rockstar reiterated that the compromised information does not affect players or core operations.
Attack tied to wider Anodot supply chain campaign
Rockstar Games has emerged as one of the latest victims in what security researchers describe as the broader Anodot supply chain attack targeting “dozens of companies.” That said, the specific impact on each victim varies depending on the level of access the attackers obtained.
The hackers reportedly located authentication tokens that granted access to customer Snowflake accounts, a key element in the compromise. However, while they also attempted to break into Salesforce accounts, they were apparently blocked before gaining meaningful access to those systems, limiting the scope of the intrusion.
In an alleged extortion message, ShinyHunters warned: “Rockstar Games, your Snowflake instances were compromised thanks to Anodot.com. Pay or leak.” They continued with a deadline: “This is a final warning to reach out by 14 Apr 2026 before we leak, along with several annoying (digital) problems that’ll come your way. Make the right decision, don’t be the next headline.”
What the leaked data actually contains
Citing sources familiar with the breach, cybersecurity outlet BleepingComputer reports that the stolen files, now available for download from the ShinyHunters site on the dark web, primarily consist of “internal analytics used to monitor Rockstar’s online services and support tickets.” However, for players and investors, those analytics still offer a rare glimpse into the companys live-service performance.
The dataset reportedly holds detailed game-economy information for Grand Theft Auto Online and Red Dead Online. Moreover, it outlines how much revenue each title generates on a daily and weekly basis, including in-game spending, purchase metrics, and behavioral tracking that measures how players interact with missions, items, and online systems.
BleepingComputer also notes that the archive includes customer-support analytics for Rockstar’s Zendesk instance, effectively turning the incident into a customer support analytics leak. That said, there is no indication so far that payment card data or highly sensitive personal information has been exposed.
Impact on Rockstar and its players
Following initial coverage of the attack, Rockstar Games downplayed the operational significance of the incident, stating that the information taken was not materially important. The company added that “this incident has no impact on our organization or our players,” reinforcing its stance that services and development plans remain intact.
However, the rockstar games breach again highlights the growing risks linked to third-party providers and complex analytics setups used by major gaming publishers. As supply chain attacks continue to spread across the industry, security teams are likely to face renewed pressure to tighten access controls and monitoring around data platforms like Snowflake and Zendesk.
In summary, the ShinyHunters release has exposed extensive internal analytics and financial metrics at Rockstar Games without delivering the headline-grabbing GTA VI leaks many expected, while underscoring how deeply supply chain attacks can penetrate modern gaming infrastructure.

